Advanced gynecologic malignancy identified after acute stroke case report

Abstract Background Endometrial carcinosarcomas are rare and carry a very poor prognosis. They usually present with extensive lymphatic spread. An acute presentation of a stroke may reveal the underlying diagnosis. Case presentation A woman in her 50s with no reported medical history presented to th...

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Main Author: Jack Jnani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2023-07-01
Series:Bulletin of the National Research Centre
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s42269-023-01070-5
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author Jack Jnani
author_facet Jack Jnani
author_sort Jack Jnani
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Endometrial carcinosarcomas are rare and carry a very poor prognosis. They usually present with extensive lymphatic spread. An acute presentation of a stroke may reveal the underlying diagnosis. Case presentation A woman in her 50s with no reported medical history presented to the emergency department as a code stroke. She was found during the evening by her sister leaving the bathroom disheveled. At that time, she was found to be mute, not following commands, with left gaze deviation and right hemiparesis. Computed tomography (CT) imaging showed an acute infarct in the left middle cerebral artery M2 branch or frontoparietal territory consistent with acute stroke. Upon further review, the sister states that she has had significant vaginal bleeding and never had menopause. On admission, she had significant anemia. CT of the abdomen and pelvis showed a large right adnexal mass, endometrial thickening, diffuse lymphadenopathy, omental nodularity, and a pulmonary nodule concerning for gynecologic malignancy with metastasis. Surgical pathology showed high grade endometrial carcinosarcoma. She was outside of the tPA window, and neurology determined her not to be a candidate for thrombectomy. She was managed medically with antiplatelet agents, high dose atorvastatin, and blood transfusions. Conclusions Endometrial carcinosarcoma can present with severe anemia and irregular menstrual bleeding. In patients without routine gynecologic care, endometrial carcinosarcoma can go unnoticed and only be identified after workup for another condition such as acute stroke. Endometrial biopsy for diagnosis may be challenging in a patient with severe anemia. Alternatively, transvaginal ultrasonography with Doppler study and magnetic resonance imaging may be used to support the diagnosis. Furthermore, endometrial carcinosarcoma can complicate ischemic stroke management as it can present with bleeding and make it difficult to use anticoagulating agents.
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spelling doaj.art-f8366f83e42c4ca3a11fc090ae06d5662023-07-16T11:08:51ZengSpringerOpenBulletin of the National Research Centre2522-83072023-07-014711610.1186/s42269-023-01070-5Advanced gynecologic malignancy identified after acute stroke case reportJack Jnani0North Shore University HospitalAbstract Background Endometrial carcinosarcomas are rare and carry a very poor prognosis. They usually present with extensive lymphatic spread. An acute presentation of a stroke may reveal the underlying diagnosis. Case presentation A woman in her 50s with no reported medical history presented to the emergency department as a code stroke. She was found during the evening by her sister leaving the bathroom disheveled. At that time, she was found to be mute, not following commands, with left gaze deviation and right hemiparesis. Computed tomography (CT) imaging showed an acute infarct in the left middle cerebral artery M2 branch or frontoparietal territory consistent with acute stroke. Upon further review, the sister states that she has had significant vaginal bleeding and never had menopause. On admission, she had significant anemia. CT of the abdomen and pelvis showed a large right adnexal mass, endometrial thickening, diffuse lymphadenopathy, omental nodularity, and a pulmonary nodule concerning for gynecologic malignancy with metastasis. Surgical pathology showed high grade endometrial carcinosarcoma. She was outside of the tPA window, and neurology determined her not to be a candidate for thrombectomy. She was managed medically with antiplatelet agents, high dose atorvastatin, and blood transfusions. Conclusions Endometrial carcinosarcoma can present with severe anemia and irregular menstrual bleeding. In patients without routine gynecologic care, endometrial carcinosarcoma can go unnoticed and only be identified after workup for another condition such as acute stroke. Endometrial biopsy for diagnosis may be challenging in a patient with severe anemia. Alternatively, transvaginal ultrasonography with Doppler study and magnetic resonance imaging may be used to support the diagnosis. Furthermore, endometrial carcinosarcoma can complicate ischemic stroke management as it can present with bleeding and make it difficult to use anticoagulating agents.https://doi.org/10.1186/s42269-023-01070-5Endometrial carcinosarcomaAcute strokeInfarctMenopauseBleedingAnemia
spellingShingle Jack Jnani
Advanced gynecologic malignancy identified after acute stroke case report
Bulletin of the National Research Centre
Endometrial carcinosarcoma
Acute stroke
Infarct
Menopause
Bleeding
Anemia
title Advanced gynecologic malignancy identified after acute stroke case report
title_full Advanced gynecologic malignancy identified after acute stroke case report
title_fullStr Advanced gynecologic malignancy identified after acute stroke case report
title_full_unstemmed Advanced gynecologic malignancy identified after acute stroke case report
title_short Advanced gynecologic malignancy identified after acute stroke case report
title_sort advanced gynecologic malignancy identified after acute stroke case report
topic Endometrial carcinosarcoma
Acute stroke
Infarct
Menopause
Bleeding
Anemia
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s42269-023-01070-5
work_keys_str_mv AT jackjnani advancedgynecologicmalignancyidentifiedafteracutestrokecasereport